There is no conspiracy if only one person is doing it. (Paul Vixie, 1997)

We know what you're thinking: 'Oh great! Another conspiracy theory site...'
Wait a minute: this is not about little green alien men from Mars, nor a remake
of the now infamous lumber cartel story.
This is an educated opinion about Big Brother's MAPS conspiracy, already in
firm control of your electronic communications.

Before the advent of the Net, it was very easy to know if you were a victim of censorship. It generally involved stuffy old men wearing wigs issuing court orders and uniformed people with large boots breaking down doors. But in the Information Age things are very different. Now the only indication may be a bouncing email or "host not responding" error message. Indeed it can be months before anyone realises censorship is going on. (Chris Evans, 2001)

As a responsible ISP since 1995, we were stunned and incredulous at first
ourselves, until it was our turn to get targeted. Nah, this cannot happen,
not in America! Well, that's exactly what happened when some providers,
whether willingly, tricked or coerced, relinquished control of their servers
and routers to the Vixie gang. The deeper we dug in our research, the scarier
it becomes. We live in Orwelian times indeed.

Does this frighten anybody else? This feels like the makings of
cyber-McCarthism. We're in danger of creating an unelected,
quasi-governmental policy-making authority in cyberspace, one
that's able to selectively disconnect, disenfranchise and ostracize
any organization not recognizing its sovereignty. (James Kobielus, 1999)

In essence, Vixie and his followers control a tap capable to
shut down at will
the world-wide connectivity of anyone they so chose. The MAPS charity is likely
a front, for Vixie's de-facto enforcement arm is his employer, Metromedia Fiber Network (NASDAQ:MFNX), their AboveNet Internet subsidiary, and their 'neutral'
PAIX exchange.

Central control goes against the redundant and distributed architecture of
the Internet. It is a cyberterrorist's ideal weapon, and our government
sheepishly (or intently?) lets it happen.

Surely, they claim to have built all this elaborate machine only to stop spam.
For your protection! They may have fooled many into believing that's all there
is to it, but much of the smoke and mirrors screen falls apart under closer
scrutiny.

Below, we look at several plausible motives behind the MAPS conspiracy.

economical

It's not easy being an ISP. The profit margins are very small, and most
Internet companies never made a dime. Lots of small ISPs had to fold when deep
pocketed giants decided to corner the market. No rational investor would
sink hard earned cash into becoming a new services provider these days, there
are much better investment opportunities.
Even Silicon Valley
has fallen on hard times. And more recently, MAPS had to
lay off half its staff to stay in business.

While economic pressures were the driving factor in market consolidation,
they were not enough to drive some smaller competitors out of business. Or
maybe not fast enough. So a bunch of would-be monopolists thought of other
ways to limit the geographical coverage of providers that do not have a
nation-wide dial-up network. What better way than to dictate email policy?

Hence reason number one for making open relaying 'politically incorrect'.
What do they really want? Our customers.

A second economical objective is market advantage. Such as establishing the
business model of Whitehat.com Inc, where Vixie sits on the board of directors,
as the only 'legitimate' way to send out bulk email. As a matter of fact, the
Whitehat board looks like the
cash cow reward for suckling anti-spam activists (i.e., Ray Everett-Church and
John Levine also got their cut).

Third, let's not forget Vixie's prediction that one day you
'will need to pay to transit email'. Pay him and his 'associates' a toll for
the privilege of communicating!

ideological

This is a more subtle issue. For how do we know what Paul Vixie really thinks or
believes in? Well, for starters, he tells us on his Vixie Enterprises web site
that he believes
'Objectivism',
the philosophy of Ayn Rand, is a worthy cause.

Objectivism rejects altruism.
'Laissez-faire' capitalism with no government intervention. Let dog eat dog.
What do they really believe in? To serve their own self-interest.

HERE
is a 'true parable' of Vixie's earlier (April 1996) beliefs in his own words:

When I was a child, it seemed to me that adults had unlimited power and
I could hardly wait to grow up so that I, too, could live above the laws
of man and of physics.

Now, as a nominal grown-up, I have found that the world is a fragile place
and that there are more, rather than less, laws I must operate within. As
a parent I have found that I have to pedal as fast as I can to give my
kids the illusion that they are safe and that nothing can hurt them while
they work on growing up.

What has this got to do with the Internet, you ask? Well, it seems to me
that mob rule, whenever it has been tried, has led to things like the alt.*
newsgroup hierarchy. I can understand why you, as a child, probably feel
that Usenet is better off with the alt.swedish.chef.bork.bork.bork group
than it was without it.
[ ... ]

As the nominal grown-up in this picture, I don't see things the same way.
Keeping this stuff running takes all of my time and all of the time of a
lot of other folks as well. I don't always agree with the IANA's way of
doing things, but I recognize that we are better off under the benign
dictatorship of someone who (a) has been around a lot longer than I have
and (b) genuinely wants the Internet to grow and take over the universe,
than we would be under mob rule.

And HERE
we find the fully grown-up Vixie, a mere year and a half later
(December 1997), himself cast as a 'benign dictator' trying to take over
YOUR corner of the universe:

And if I get back some horrified stare that
says, `Paul you're going to be the next Hitler; you're going to take
over the universe,' I'm pretty much expecting that I'm not going to
tell them that their concerns aren't justified. I am as worried about
this as I think is healthy, but I'm not willing, once again, to say,
`Well, because concentrating power in the hands of one person has
always been dangerous, we should not attempt what we're doing.'

political

Perhaps the most important revelation was that some organization called the
United Nations New World Order is headquartered in
Vixie's offices, and the domain unnwo.net is used to control blackholed traffic.
We also find CTO Paul Vixie and VP Dave Rand rubbing elbows at the corporate
board table with David Rockefeller, a director of Metromedia Fiber Network, Inc.
You heard the name: Rockefeller, the very billionaire founder of the Trilateral
Commission, leader of the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR), and Bilderberg
group member!

Any questions? We rather prefer you do your own
research into the controversial practices of
these organizations.

This may explain their actions as activism in implementing the New World Order
agenda.
What are they really after? Globalization, at the expense of your freedom and
independence.

It's no secret that Vixie and the MAPS vigilantes want to get sued.
They have broken several laws, the most obvious one is conspiring to restrict
trade.

There were five lawsuits filed against MAPS to date
(Yesmail,
Harris,
Black Ice,
Exactis, and
Media3).
Four were settled, the Black Ice case is still pending.
It takes a substantial sum of money, time and effort to defend your rights in
federal court. We are not surprised that most companies would rather submit
than fight, especially because the Department of Justice lets it go on
unchallenged.

Vixie knows this. He's likely counting on the government's hands-off policy
and stated intent to let the Internet 'self-regulate'. What better opportunity
for extortionate vigilantes such as MAPS to become the de-facto regulators?

Bluntly put, it's hard to imagine an American court of law saying that it's
okay for any private party to become a censor by disrupting other providers'
communications at will. But to test this, we likely would need to put a half
million dollars cash on the table.

What is their declared goal? To gain legitimacy by establishing a legal precedent.

government mandate

This one is pure speculation. But there are precedents: Communications Decency
Act of 1996 (the CDA was later defeated in the US Supreme Court for containing
unconstitutional provisions),
Carnivore
and ECHELON.

Let's say the government would like greater control over your electronic
communications. They could come out and openly monitor
(FBI's Carnivore program), wiretap,
or sneakingly listen in (ECHELON). That is fine, as long as they know where
you are, and which server you use. The way the Internet was originally set up,
if one really wanted to remain anonymous and untraceable, one could get lost
in the sauce.

Would a spammer peddling some pitiful wares go to all that trouble? Maybe,
but there has to be some way to contact the vendor of the product, or visit
the web site advertised, or respond to a dropbox, or send the make-money-fast
huckster a buck, etc., otherwise the spam would be totally useless.

E-mail is much easier controlled and monitored if the user is confined to
his/her provider's server. Spammers are a paltry minority compared with
legitimate users of distributed networks. Whether from another account at work,
while traveling, from an Internet cafe, friend's place, totalitarian regime
country, hidden from the nosy boss, etc., users naturally want to be able to
access and make full use of their accounts. They may also want, for a number
of private reasons, to be able to send or receive communications on the
Internet similar to using a public phone, rather than dial in.

Remote use doesn't happen through the ISP's local dial-in network, and such
communications are tough to control and monitor. Hence the MAPS new and
'politically correct' way to stop message relaying and keep you where they
can watch you...

Say some men wearing trench coats and sunglasses approached Vixie and suggested
he mount this little MAPS front to change your 'bad' communications habits?
Again, pure speculation. But it may, hypotetically of course, be a reason why
the Department of Justice failed so far to act against MAPS blackholing with
impunity selected parts of the Net at will.

afterthoughts

Imagine the following scenario: Commandante Adelante invites some MAPS
minion to his hacienda in Corteguay for a fat job offer. He wines and dines
the lucky geek, then sends busty Senorita Conchita with his compliments and
a discrete 'gift' to his quarters. While whispering sweet nothings in his ear,
Senorita persuades the pimplefaced mapster to keep track of messages for Rebel
Ariel, each of which are continuously checked against Vixie's blackhole lists
by providers using MAPS.

¿Muy facile this job for you, right Senor? Imagine...

The point is, the statistical information gathered by MAPS from lame providers
checking each message address against their database could be sorted and
compiled in such way that it may be used against a competitor, sold to the
highest bidder, draw certain inferences, etc. There are no laws in force that
prevent Vixie et al from doing such things with the data they collect. How do
you know they don't do it already?

vanity

Or bragging rights. To an egocentric maniac like Vixie, such things are
important. He's better than you or me, he's always right, and God help the
unfortunate soul that dares to dissent with any of his opininions in a public
forum. He himself or his minions will tear debaters apart!

The image he projects or wants to be associated with is riddled with power
symbols (i.e., Men In Black Hats/Helicopters; Whitehat.com; United Nations
New World Order).
The Bad, The Good, and The Ugly activist.